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Oidium mangiferae is a plant pathogen that infects mango trees causing powdery mildew. [1] Powdery mildew of mango is an Ascomycete pathogen of the Erysiphales family that was initially described by Berthet in 1914, using samples collected from Brazil. [2]
Few of the symptoms can be mistakenly confused with insect injury or infection from other disease like mango anthracnose. [3] [4] Confirmation of the presence of mango scab requires microscopic examination of material from fruit, stems or leaves, and culture of the organism. Culture will only be successful from lesions on young plant material.
Mango malformation Fusarium subglutinans (Note: some debate remains as to complete etiology of this disease.) Mucor rot Mucor circinelloides. Mushroom root rot Armillaria tabescens. Phoma blight Phoma glomerata. Phyllosticta leaf spot Phyllosticta mortonii Phyllosticta citricarpa Guignardia citricarpa [teleomorph] Phyllosticta anacardiacearum
Fusarium mangiferae is one of the causal agents of malformation disease that affects mango (Mangifera indica, L.) growing regions and is economically important. [3] [4] [5] It causes mango malformation disease (MMD) and induces vegetative development abnormalities in shoots that leads to misshaped buds, short internodes, dwarf and narrow leaves.
Pages in category "Mango tree diseases" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. * List of mango ...
There are a range of cultural, chemical and non-chemical techniques for minimizing damage to the mango crop, for example the use of physical barriers to stop Drosicha mangiferae nymphs crawling up the stem of mango trees, by wrapping plastic sheets or sticky bands (sometimes impregnated with insecticide) around the tree stem. [3] [4] [5]
By planting four plaksa trees a person doubtlessly obtains the fruits of Rajasuya sacrifice. One who plants five or six mango trees attains the abode of Garuda and lives happily forever like gods. One should plant seven palasa trees or even one. One attains the abode of Brahma and enjoys the company of gods by doing so.
Peziotrichum corticola is an ascomycete fungus that is a plant pathogen. [2] It was first discovered in India by Massee. [3] Rhinocladium corticola is a known synonym. [4]P. corticola causes black-band disease on the leaves and bark of mango trees. [5]